Russians to compete at Rio, as Australia welcomes news

RUSSIAN athletes have avoided a blanket ban from the Rio Olympics after the International Olympic Committee elected to allow individual sport federations to determine their role in state-sponsored doping.

The 387 members of the Russia team faced the prospect of a ban from the competition next month after a Wada report published details on a ''culture'' of systematic, state-sponsored doping

The IOC's decision, revealed on Sunday afternoon, means the individual federations have 12 days to review each athletes' conduct on a case-by-case basis in a defining moment of president Thomas Bach's tenure on the committee.

The "Chef De Mission" of the Australian Olympic Team, Kitty Chiller, said the decision to allow Russia to compete was the right one.

Chiller told media in Rio that "no Russian athlete that has been sanctioned for a doping offence can compete at the Rio Games".

"The 67 athletes banned by the International Athletics Federation (IAAF) are not competing in Rio.

"Their bans remain in force.

"Russian athletes who want to compete need to convince their individual International Federation (IF) and provide evidence they are clean."

"In a nutshell, the presumption of innocence cannot be applied to them, there is insufficient time for hearings with the Games so close. They have to prove they deserve to be at the Games."

Calls for a blanket ban had intensified with Olympic skeleton racer and British IOC member Adam Pengilly saying: ''The scale, leadership and co-ordination of a system like this is arguably the most heinous crime possible against the Olympic movement.''

Swimmer Rebecca Adlington and hurdler Sally Gunnell are also among the signatories who have endorsed a letter sent by The Times newspaper to the IOC which urged them to ban Russia from Rio.

It follows a report commissioned by Wada and undertaken by Canadian lawyer Richard McLaren which reaffirmed allegations that the Russian sports ministry oversaw an expansive doping programme, including the manipulation of urine samples at the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi.

It additionally revealed that doping in 28 summer sports from 2011 to 2015 had also received state sponsorship. Bach said the findings showed a ''shocking and unprecedented attack on the integrity of sports and on the Olympic Games'' and declared the IOC ''will not hesitate to take the toughest sanctions available against any individual or organization implicated.''

A statement from the IOC after Sunday's meeting said: "Entry (to the Rio Olympics) will be accepted by the IOC only if an athlete is able to provide evidence to the full satisfaction of his or her international federation."

Russia's track and field athletes have already been banned by the IAAF and other federations now face a race against time to establish those Russians who meet the criteria set out to allow them to compete in Brazil.

But now there is the likelihood of some Russian athletes appearing in Rio, with an IOC statement released on Sunday afternoon following their executive board meeting confirming international federations will be tasked with the job of banning those who do not tick all the right boxes.